Mao Lee (left) and her mother Ma Lee sell produce grown on the family farm in Eagan, Minnesota, called Lee Farms, at the Maple Grove Farmers' Market on August 17.

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MAPLE GROVE, Minnesota (AP):

As Mao Lee's parents get older, she has taken on more responsibility for the family's produce farming business, including a lot of physical labour.

"It makes you appreciate life. Working in the rain, treading in the mud makes you appreciate running water and a warm bed at night," she said as she and her mother, Ma Lee, sold peppers, eggplants and other vegetables at the Maple Grove Farmers' Market.

But Lee, 28, also has a college degree in fish and wildlife, and she doesn't know if she'll be farming forever, Minnesota Public Radio reported. The Lees rent land in Eagan, but even new farmers who inherit land face a host of challenges.

"The dollars involved in farming today are mind-boggling," said Karson Duncanson, a farmer from Mapleton, Minnesota, who was thrust into a management role after his father was killed in a car accident in 2015.

Duncanson spoke at Farmfest in Redwood Falls last month on a panel that explored the challenges of new farmers. He said that with the prices of corn and soybeans down, he and his brother were just trying to break even. They rent equipment from a holding company. Duncanson says buying land isn't an option for a lot of young farmers like himself.

"To have a beginning farmer expect to just be able to purchase all that land from the retiring generation isn't really feasible anymore. You've got to think outside the box," he said.

The US Department of Agriculture estimates some 90 million acres of farmland will change hands nationwide in the next five years.

GREAT DRAMA

"There is no greater drama than what's going on in the rural countryside right now on farmland transitions," said Teresa Opheim, who wrote a whole book about the future of family farms in the Midwest.

A lot of farmland ends up being rented out or sold to the highest bidder, making it hard for beginning farmers to get started, she said.

"Not much land is coming on the market, and when it is coming on the market it's being sold very quickly," Opheim said.

Equipment is expensive. For example, a Ziegler CAT tractor available for test drives at Farmfest costs about US$350,000 US$100,000 more than the median price of a home in Minneapolis.

The land itself can easily go for more than US$7,000 an acre, depending on which area of the state you're in.

Cash flow, land access big challenges

Having enough cash flow and access to land are the biggest challenges new farmers face, according to the National Young Farmer Coalition.

As more Minnesota farmers reach retirement age, the transition can also bring up plenty of emotions within a family.

Pam Uhlenkamp, a farm business management instructor in Mankato, said a lot of farmers want their kids to carry on the family legacy. But farming isn't for everyone, she said, leading to tough conversations.

Uhlenkamp gave the example of a dairy farm she's helping transition from one generation to the next.

"Every time I leave the farm, I ask the incoming generation, 'Is milking cows what you want to do every day of your life?' Because I feel deep down in my heart it's not what he wants to do, but he's afraid to say it," she said.

Other times, the kids make clear they don't want to farm, and it's tough for the farmer to let go.

"There are people coming up in the ranks that are so excited about agriculture and are so excited for the opportunities that lie ahead of them, even though it's hard," said Natasha Mortenson, a former agriculture instructor who works for Riverview, a large dairy company out of Morris.

Mortenson said the older generation has to let young people in even if those young people aren't family.

Besides equipment costs and land access, farmers have to deal with a lot of uncertainty, said Val Aarsvold, executive director of the Minnesota FFA Foundation, which helps young people gain skills in farming and business management.

"They can do everything right, and then if the weather turns on them or the markets change, they've exposed themselves to a lot of risk," she said.

"If you talk to young people who farm, there's a twinkle in their eye as they talk about all the things they want to do," Aarsvold said. "But there's also that next part of the conversation of how do we get the money to start, how do we make good decisions to make sure the farm is going to feed their family?"